The generation gap is often treated as a modern problem, blamed on smartphones, social media, video games, television, rock and roll, or changing manners. Yet the conflict between old and young is far older than any modern invention. Across history, older generations have worried that the young were becoming disrespectful, distracted, immoral, impatient, badly dressed, poorly spoken, politically reckless, or too quick to abandon inherited values. Younger generations, in turn, have often felt misunderstood by adults trying to guide them with rules shaped by a world already changing.
The Generation Gap tells the long, fact-based story of that recurring human pattern. Moving from ancient complaints about youth to the rise of schooling, printed books, industrial cities, adolescence, jazz, rock and roll, television, punk, video games, computers, the internet, smartphones, social media, climate politics, and modern work, this book follows the many ways families and societies have argued over change. Written in a polished, accessible narrative style, it shows that the battle between old and new is not a passing crisis but one of history's most persistent forces.
This is a book about parents and children, memory and arrival, discipline and freedom, fear and possibility. It explains why every generation thinks the next one has gone too far-and why the argument never truly ends.
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Vendeur : California Books, Miami, FL, Etats-Unis
Etat : New. AI (illustrateur). N° de réf. du vendeur I-9798901947050
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Paperback. Etat : new. AI (illustrateur). Paperback. The generation gap is often treated as a modern problem, blamed on smartphones, social media, video games, television, rock and roll, or changing manners. Yet the conflict between old and young is far older than any modern invention. Across history, older generations have worried that the young were becoming disrespectful, distracted, immoral, impatient, badly dressed, poorly spoken, politically reckless, or too quick to abandon inherited values. Younger generations, in turn, have often felt misunderstood by adults trying to guide them with rules shaped by a world already changing. The Generation Gap tells the long, fact-based story of that recurring human pattern. Moving from ancient complaints about youth to the rise of schooling, printed books, industrial cities, adolescence, jazz, rock and roll, television, punk, video games, computers, the internet, smartphones, social media, climate politics, and modern work, this book follows the many ways families and societies have argued over change. Written in a polished, accessible narrative style, it shows that the battle between old and new is not a passing crisis but one of history's most persistent forces. This is a book about parents and children, memory and arrival, discipline and freedom, fear and possibility. It explains why every generation thinks the next one has gone too far-and why the argument never truly ends. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798901947050
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Paperback. Etat : new. AI (illustrateur). Paperback. The generation gap is often treated as a modern problem, blamed on smartphones, social media, video games, television, rock and roll, or changing manners. Yet the conflict between old and young is far older than any modern invention. Across history, older generations have worried that the young were becoming disrespectful, distracted, immoral, impatient, badly dressed, poorly spoken, politically reckless, or too quick to abandon inherited values. Younger generations, in turn, have often felt misunderstood by adults trying to guide them with rules shaped by a world already changing. The Generation Gap tells the long, fact-based story of that recurring human pattern. Moving from ancient complaints about youth to the rise of schooling, printed books, industrial cities, adolescence, jazz, rock and roll, television, punk, video games, computers, the internet, smartphones, social media, climate politics, and modern work, this book follows the many ways families and societies have argued over change. Written in a polished, accessible narrative style, it shows that the battle between old and new is not a passing crisis but one of history's most persistent forces. This is a book about parents and children, memory and arrival, discipline and freedom, fear and possibility. It explains why every generation thinks the next one has gone too far-and why the argument never truly ends. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798901947050
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Paperback. Etat : new. AI (illustrateur). Paperback. The generation gap is often treated as a modern problem, blamed on smartphones, social media, video games, television, rock and roll, or changing manners. Yet the conflict between old and young is far older than any modern invention. Across history, older generations have worried that the young were becoming disrespectful, distracted, immoral, impatient, badly dressed, poorly spoken, politically reckless, or too quick to abandon inherited values. Younger generations, in turn, have often felt misunderstood by adults trying to guide them with rules shaped by a world already changing. The Generation Gap tells the long, fact-based story of that recurring human pattern. Moving from ancient complaints about youth to the rise of schooling, printed books, industrial cities, adolescence, jazz, rock and roll, television, punk, video games, computers, the internet, smartphones, social media, climate politics, and modern work, this book follows the many ways families and societies have argued over change. Written in a polished, accessible narrative style, it shows that the battle between old and new is not a passing crisis but one of history's most persistent forces. This is a book about parents and children, memory and arrival, discipline and freedom, fear and possibility. It explains why every generation thinks the next one has gone too far-and why the argument never truly ends. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798901947050
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Vendeur : AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Allemagne
Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. AI (illustrateur). nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - The generation gap is often treated as a modern problem, blamed on smartphones, social media, video games, television, rock and roll, or changing manners. Yet the conflict between old and young is far older than any modern invention. Across history, older generations have worried that the young were becoming disrespectful, distracted, immoral, impatient, badly dressed, poorly spoken, politically reckless, or too quick to abandon inherited values. Younger generations, in turn, have often felt misunderstood by adults trying to guide them with rules shaped by a world already changing. The Generation Gap tells the long, fact-based story of that recurring human pattern. Moving from ancient complaints about youth to the rise of schooling, printed books, industrial cities, adolescence, jazz, rock and roll, television, punk, video games, computers, the internet, smartphones, social media, climate politics, and modern work, this book follows the many ways families and societies have argued over change. Written in a polished, accessible narrative style, it shows that the battle between old and new is not a passing crisis but one of history's most persistent forces. This is a book about parents and children, memory and arrival, discipline and freedom, fear and possibility. It explains why every generation thinks the next one has gone too far-and why the argument never truly ends. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798901947050
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Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. AI (illustrateur). The Generation Gap | Parents, Children, Music, Manners, Technology, and the Endless Battle Between Old and New | Sky Adler | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2026 | PublishDrive | EAN 9798901947050 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand. N° de réf. du vendeur 135587761
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